Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Changes Made At La Loche High School To Make The Place 'Homey' For Students

The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2016 11:10 AM
    LA LOCHE, Sask. — Staff at the high school in La Loche, Sask., say changes are being made to help students feel safe and comfortable when they return Friday.
     
    Administration assistant Martha Morin says it's hoped a hot breakfast will make the building feel "homey," as students will see an RCMP school resource officer and security guards there for the first time.
     
    Students will also have four classes a day instead of five, and will be able to attend classrooms off the site if they don't want to be in the school.
     
    A mass shooting last month in the community left four people dead.
     
    A gunman first killed two teenage brothers at a home, then walked into the high school and opened fire, killing a teacher and teacher's aide and wounding seven others.
     
    Students at the school's nearby elementary building returned to regular classes Wednesday morning.
     
    Vice-principal Erin Trotechaud says the children's smiles lifted a heavy presence that had been in the building.
     
    "It's amazing how when you fill it with children and there's laughter and there's smiles, it just kind of washes it away and — it was really beautiful.
     
    "It feels like home again."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Extreme Cold Gripping Parts Of Central, Eastern Canada This Weekend

    Extreme Cold Gripping Parts Of Central, Eastern Canada This Weekend
    A bitter cold is gripping parts of central and eastern Canada today as temperatures dip to -45 C with the wind chill in some areas.

    Extreme Cold Gripping Parts Of Central, Eastern Canada This Weekend

    First Nations Basketball Player Excluded From Games, Native Identity Questioned

    First Nations Basketball Player Excluded From Games, Native Identity Questioned
    VANCOUVER — Tattooed on Josiah Wilson's chest is a fine line of writing that combines two significant dates: his birth and the death of his biological mother four days after he was born.

    First Nations Basketball Player Excluded From Games, Native Identity Questioned

    Ex-Quebec Doctor Guy Turcotte Who Killed His Kids Wants To Appeal Parole Eligibility Ruling

    Ex-Quebec Doctor Guy Turcotte Who Killed His Kids Wants To Appeal Parole Eligibility Ruling
    Guy Turcotte's lawyers filed a motion before the Quebec Court of Appeal on Friday, hoping to challenge the trial judge's ruling he must spend at least 17 years behind bars before being able to apply for parole.

    Ex-Quebec Doctor Guy Turcotte Who Killed His Kids Wants To Appeal Parole Eligibility Ruling

    70 Percent Delhiites Say Corruption Not Reduced But 50 Percent Would Vote For AAP Again

    70 Percent Delhiites Say Corruption Not Reduced But 50 Percent Would Vote For AAP Again
    Seventy percent of the people surveyed by a "citizen engagement platform" associated with the BJP, believe that corruption has not reduced in Delhi under the Arvind Kejriwal government, but nearly 50 percent said they would vote for the AAP again

    70 Percent Delhiites Say Corruption Not Reduced But 50 Percent Would Vote For AAP Again

    Kelowna Mountie Break Bones In Hand During Attack In Emergency Room: RCMP

    Kelowna Mountie Break Bones In Hand During Attack In Emergency Room: RCMP
    3 Mounties responded to a call about a volatile patient who'd barricaded himself in a treatment room and covered a security camera

    Kelowna Mountie Break Bones In Hand During Attack In Emergency Room: RCMP

    Promises Kept, Broken, In Progress During Justin Trudeau's First 100 Days In Power

    Promises Kept, Broken, In Progress During Justin Trudeau's First 100 Days In Power
    Here's a look at what's been accomplished — or not — so far:

    Promises Kept, Broken, In Progress During Justin Trudeau's First 100 Days In Power